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Protecting the Planet Against the Next Food Crisis
When you live in a place where grocery stores are common and
well-stocked, the following
headlines may seem peculiar: "Riots, Instability Spread as Food Prices Skyrocket," "Global Food Riots Turn Deadly," "Hunger to Replace Energy Crisis."
But the stories are real, and speakers in a symposium at the 2009 AAAS Annual Meeting in Chicago said
that such headlines may become more common if immediate actions are not taken to improve the quality and
supply of reliable agriculture in the world's poorest nations.
Their key to preventing future food crises: ensuring reliable access to cheap, nutrient-rich foods by developing better seeds.
Specifically,
the speakers called on scientists, governments, and non-governmental
organizations to work together to ensure that farmers in the developing
would have reliable access to seeds that are resistant to pests and
produce high-yields. Because many of these nations have begun to
experience the effects of a changing climate, the seeds should also be
resistant to extreme temperatures, floods, and
drought.
"Bringing science to agriculture has the potential to
save millions of people and effect the lives of billions of people,"
said Ren Wang, director of the Consultative Group on International
Agriculture Research (CGAIR).
CGIAR is a coalition of organizations--governmental, inter-governmental, and foundations-- which seek to achieve
sustainable food security and reduce poverty in developing countries
through scientific research and research-related activities in
agriculture, forestry, fisheries, policy, and environment. CGAIR has 64
coalition organizations with 8,500 consulting scientists and 15
international research centers around the world.
One
of its most successful projects was developing a drought-tolerant
maize seed, Africa's most important cereal crop. When a drought occurs,
the harvest
can be ruined, and that can result in widespread food shortages, riots, and
famine deaths. But through their research, CGAIR has developed more
than 50 drought-tolerant strains of maize seed. CGAIR is in the process of distributing them throughout Africa.
Beyond
work in Africa, Wang said his organization has projects in Asia to
revitalize the cereal crops and control wheat
rust, which can ruin a harvest.
"We have the ability to reduce hunger and malnutrition through science," said Wang.
Robert Zeigler,
director general of the International Rice Research Institute, said
that the best way to distribute the technology to the areas that need
them the most is to foster small and medium-sized seed businesses. These
small companies can ensure the quality of the seeds, and most
importantly, have local contacts and relationships with the farmers, he
said.
Jon Hamilton, a science correspondent for National Public
Radio, recounted several stories he filed on the lack of clean water
around the world, which he called "inextricably linked to food crises."
"You
have very dry countries that use all of their water for drinking,
leaving farmers nothing with which to water their crops," Hamilton
said. "That in turn creates a significant food crisis."
While
stories of food crises around the world have grabbed headlines,
Hamilton said that most go unreported because they don't effect much of
the media-consuming world. But that could soon change.
Due to
the global economic downturn, Hamilton said that media report of
food crises could increase, with shortages appearing in places once
thought to have a surplus.

